Review of some little-known benthic hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Southern Ocean
Author
Peña Cantero, Álvaro L.
text
Zootaxa
2015
3972
3
369
392
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3972.3.4
37cf6488-091a-40ce-ae0a-2e251f6254ea
1175-5326
236731
C1698260-269E-4D15-A562-D8FF46751F7F
Rhizorhagium antarcticum
(
Hickson & Gravely, 1907
)
(
Figs 1
C, D, 2E, F, 3F)
Perigonimus antarcticus
Hickson & Gravely, 1907
: 4
–6, pl. 1 figs 1–3, pl. 4 fig. 32;
Rees, 1938
: 7
; 1956: 338, 347;
Naumov & Stepanjants, 1972
: 33
, 35; Stepanjants, 1972: 56–57, fig. 1; 1979: 10, pl. 1 fig. 1.
Atractylis antarctica
—
Vanhöffen, 1910
: 283
, fig. 8;
Atractylis antarcticus
—
Ritchie, 1913
: 10
, 11.
Gravelya antarctica
—
Totton, 1930
: 139
, fig. 1a, b.
?
Gravelya antarcticum
—
Schuchert, 1996
: 41
–42, fig. 21a–d.
Rhizorhagium antarcticum
—
Stechow, 1919
: 21
;
Rees, 1956
: 338
, 347;
Rees & Thursfield, 1965
: 55
;
Millard, 1971
: 401
, fig. 3;
Branch & Williams, 1993
: 8
, fig.;
Peña Cantero, 2004
: 768
;
Bouillon
et al
., 2006
: 137
, fig.
79I
, J;
Peña Cantero
et al
., 2013
: 735
–736, figs 2c–d, 3a–b.
Material examined.
Discovery
Antarctic
Expedition
1901-04
:
Type
(NHM 1907.8.20.1), McMurdo Bay (Ross Sea), 1–20 fms, several stems, with gonophores, on
Hydrodendron arboreum
.
Description.
Usually stolonal (
Fig. 1
C, D), but stems with up to three polyps present. Stems covered with perisarc (
Figs 1
C, D, 2E, F), smoothly disappearing on hydranth body (
Fig. 2
E, F). No distinct pseudohydrotheca present. Polyps 800–900 µm high and 250–300 µm in maximum diameter, with conical hypostome and a distal crown of nine to 12 filiform tentacles (
Fig. 2
E, F).
Gonophores c. 950 µm high and c. 680 µm in maximum diameter, on short pedicels, either on hydrorhizal stolon or at basal part of largest stems (
Figs 1
C, D, 3F). “The colonies appear to be invariably dioecious. In both sexes the gonophore is a degenerate medusa ... protected by a thin layer of perisarc. It is larger in the female than in the male (
1.1 mm
. x
0.9 mm
. in the female, and
0.9 mm
. x
0.7 mm
. in the male). In the female gonophore there is a large sub-umbrella cavity (fig. 3, su.c), the manubrium is well developed and has a well-marked endoderm cavity. In the young gonophore there is a distinct endodermal layer of cells and mesoglea in the umbrella, but in the adult gonophore (fig. 32) these are reduced to a non-cellular mesoglea except at the margin, where a cord of cells represents the ring canal. There are no radial canals in the adult gonophore. In the male gonophore the subumbrella cavity is completely filled with sperm cells (figs. 2 and 32, sp.)” (
Hickson & Gravely, 1907: 5
).
Cnidome consisting of two categories of nematocysts,
Type
I (microbasic euryteles?) and desmonemes.
Measurements (in µm).
Cnidome
:
Type
I [range 7.0–7.5 x 4.0–4.5, mean 7.3±0.2 x 4.1±0.2 (n=10); ratio, range 1.6–1.9, mean 1.8±0.1 (n=10)], desmonemes [range 5.5–6.0 x 3.0–3.5].
Remarks.
This is a well-characterized species, the only important character missing from the original description was information related to the cnidome. The examination of the
type
material has allowed me to complete this partially. The heteronemes could not be identified because they could not be seen discharged. However, it is worth mentioning that
Peña Cantero
et al.
(2013)
, in material that perfectly agrees with this species, identified them as microbasic euryteles.
Millard (1971)
also indicated the presence of microbasic euryteles.
Hickson & Gravely (1907)
gave an excellent description of the gonophores (see above).
Problems with this species were related with its genus allocation. Originally described as
Perigonimus antarcticus
, it was later considered belonging to
Atractylis
by
Vanhöffen (1910)
.
Totton (1930)
even erected the new genus
Gravelya
to allocate it.
Rees (1938)
re-erected the genus
Rhizorhagium
M. Sars, 1874
to include all unbranched colonial bougainvilliids with pseudohydrotheca not enveloping the tentacles, with one crown of filiform tentacles and with fixed sporosacs.
Calder (1988)
separated members with nipple-shaped hypostomes from this group, including the
type
species of
Rhizorhagium
(
R. roseum
). Consequently,
Schuchert (1996)
saw it necessary to move those species that lack nipple-shaped hypostomes into other genera, in particular to
Aselomaris
Berrill, 1948
and
Gravelya
Totton, 1930
, the latter harbouring the present species. More recently, however, Calder’s division based on the shape of the hypostome was not supported (cf.
Bouillon
et al
. 2006
: 126) and the species is again considered belonging to
Rhizorhagium
.
Schuchert’s (1996) material seems to correspond to a different species. The perisarc and the pseudohydrotheca are contaminated with detritus and the size of polyps is smaller. Female gonophores are also distinctly smaller (0.5 x
0.3 mm
) than those studied by
Hickson & Gravely (1907)
. He also indicated that there are up to
20 eggs
per gonophore;
Millard (1971)
and
Branch & Williams (1993)
found 30–
40
eggs.
According to the diagnosis of the genus provided by
Bouillon
et al.
(2006)
,
Rhizorhagium
should have ‘perisarc firm, continued over polyp base as a pseudohydrotheca, but never investing tentacle bases’. According to
Hickson & Gravely, (1907)
, ‘the perisarc is continued as an exceedingly thin film over the hydranth as far as the base of the tentacles’.
Naumov & Stepanjants (1972: 35)
also indicated that ‘the polyp’s body is covered by a fine sheet of perisarc reaching the base of tentacles’. In the material examined the perisarc is not firm and it does not form a distinct pseudohydrotheca; the perisarc sheet covering the polyp body is totally inconspicuous.
Ecology and distribution.
Rhizorhagium antarcticum
has been found at depths from the tidal level (
Hickson & Gravely 1907
) to
450 m
(
Totton 1930
), epibiotic on hydroids (
Hartlaub 1904
;
Ritchie 1913
;
Totton 1930
;
Naumov & Stepanjants 1972
; Stepanjants 1972, 1979;
Peña Cantero
et al
. 2013
) and tube of polychaete (
Peña Cantero
et al
. 2013
) and epilithic on stones (
Millard 1971
). It is used in turn as substrate by other species of hydroids (
Peña Cantero
et al
. 2013
). Gonophores have been found in colonies collected in January (
Totton 1930
;
Stepanjants 1979
;
Peña Cantero
et al
. 2013
), February (
Totton 1930
;
Stepanjants 1979
), from May to July (
Stepanjants 1979
), August (
Ritchie 1913
;
Stepanjants 1979
) and in December (
Stepanjants 1979
).
Probably Antarctic-Kerguelen distribution, although a careful re-examination of previous records is needed. In
Antarctic
waters, recorded from the Ross Sea (
Hickson & Gravely 1907
;
Ritchie 1913
;
Totton 1930
;
Peña Cantero
et al
. 2013
), Adélie Land (
Naumov & Stepanjants 1972
), Davis Sea (
Vanhöffen 1910
; Stepanjants 1972, 1979), and Sodruzestva Sea (Emery glacier) (
Stepanjants 1979
), in East
Antarctica
, and from the Bellingshausen Sea (
Hartlaub 1904
), in West
Antarctica
. In sub-Antarctic waters, it is known from off Marion and Prince Edwards Islands (
Millard 1971
;
Branch & Williams 1993
) and Crozet (
Stepanjants 1979
). Schuchert’s (1996) record is from
New Zealand
.